Heiress for Hire - Madeline Hunter Page 0,91

the countess’s bodice revealed more bosom than it covered. Minerva glanced down at her own décolleté. Upon donning the dress she had thought it daring. Suddenly it appeared sedate enough for a church.

Eventually the duke brought her to Chase, and pointedly eased the lady in red away. The chance to flirt with a duke proved an effective lure. Minerva watched the red stroll into the group.

“She is beautiful,” she said.

“I suppose so.”

“Of course she is. You have eyes.”

“My, you are snappish. Are you jealous?”

“Of course not.”

He tipped his head closer. “Not at all? I am wounded. As for my eyes, I saw only you once you appeared. It was all I could do not to be rude, and to these eyes no woman here is as beautiful as you are.”

Now she felt foolish. She had been snappish. “Perhaps I was a little jealous. I suppose lovely women flirt with you shamelessly all the time. I should not make too much of it.”

“Still snapping a bit, I see.” He stepped back and looked at her from head to toe. “The dress makes you look seductive.”

It was not a word she would have used. Certainly no one else ever had. Yet his calling her that made her feel seductive. “Perhaps I should flirt shamelessly too.”

“Only with me, darling. Now we will walk over and join Kevin and that woman who has been pursuing him for months. She is a viscount’s wife—the viscount is that man over there—and apparently she finds Kevin’s preoccupation with his invention attractive.”

“Perhaps she only finds him attractive. He is a very handsome man in a somewhat dramatic way. All the Radnor cousins were blessed by nature. Even that one whose wife talks for him.”

They made their way toward Kevin and the eager viscountess. “Thank you for the carriage. It was a treat. I felt like a queen.”

“I’m glad. I bought it yesterday.”

She fingered the raw silk of her skirt. “Thank you for this too. I assume you were my mystery benefactor.”

“I make no claims or denials.”

Kevin greeted them with what looked like relief. The viscountess appeared less than pleased. Her expression cleared when she learned that Minerva aided Chase on some of his inquiries. With a long look she regarded them both. Minerva all but heard the woman’s head drawing conclusions. After that, the viscountess was very friendly.

* * *

“I am too full,” Minerva said. “I feel as portly as your cousin’s butler.”

Chase patted her stomach. “You did enjoy yourself heartily.”

“Blame Beth. She said she wanted all the particulars and I could hardly give them if I didn’t taste it all.”

They sat together in the new carriage. Chase thought the dinner had been successful for Nicholas, his first as the new duke. A small affair, he had invited people not given to hard criticisms. If any were there, Minerva at least did not notice them. She was bright-eyed and vivacious throughout it all, behaving as if of course she should be sitting with those lords. She had perhaps overindulged herself at the table, though. She had only taken the tiniest taste of most of it, but even that was enough to put her in her current state.

“You probably should take me home,” she said. “I am not fit for anything else.”

“If you want, I will do so. I would like to hold you for a while, though. I don’t need anything else.” Except conversation. He needed to talk to her about her husband’s death. Finally.

It had been a bad three days for his conscience. He had engaged in more self-reflection than he normally embraced. The conclusions he had drawn, about her, and himself, and their liaison had surprised him. Nor could he ignore that once his anger subsided, the strongest reaction became an urge to protect her, not investigate her.

“You can visit at my house, if you want,” she said. “I would feel better there, in case I—”

He told the coachman where to go. “You will feel much better in an hour or so. You drank a fair amount of wine, and that is only making it worse.”

At her house, she went above for a while. When she returned she wore the new undressing gown. Her expression suggested that just removing her stays and dress had helped.

“Won’t Beth mind?” he asked, embracing her shoulders when she sat beside him.

“It is my house.”

“Of course.”

She lolled her head on his arm. “It was a wonderful dinner party. I’m sure in the morning I will relive every magical moment. The flickering

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